I want to complete this unit as a 2/10. Are there any other differences in front of the 2/5's "firewall", such as the video card, that will prevent me from using the 2/10 card cage in this unit?
Chassis differences between the 2/5 and 2/10
Chassis 60 pin card edge connector
- 2/5: mounted directly to the chassis. This results in the two card edge connectors of the 2/5 motherboard to be offset.
- 2/10: mounted on standoffs, making it more recessed in the chassis. This results in the two card edge connectors of the 2/10 motherboard to be aligned.
- 2/5: Terminates in two 26 pin socket connectors (originally for two Twiggy drives, the 2/5 drive cage uses the Lite Adapter to convert one of the 26 pin sockets to the 20 pin cable used by the 3.5" drive), and one 10 pin socket for the power button/keyboard jack
- 2/10: Terminates in one 26 pin socket connector (the internal parallel port), one 20 pin socket connector (for a 3.5" floppy) and one 10 pin socket for the power button/keyboard jack
- 2/5: has a 3 pin socket, not used by anything that we know of
- 2/10: has an 8 pin socket that provides power to a Widget
- 2/5: does not have the 2/10 cutout
- 2/10: has a cutout aligned with a slot 3 expansion card. The cutout appears to be suitable for a 60 pin card edge connector; typically unused except for eg. routing a SCSI cable for an internal drive.
- Video Board
- CRT, flyback transformer
- power switch & keyboard jack assembly
- speaker and front panel safety interlock
- card edge connectors for the power supply and the motherboard
- plastic panels, aside from the dual Twiggy front panel
So, to convert a 2/5 chassis for use with a 2/10 motherboard:
- remount the 60 pin card edge connector on standoffs.
- If you wish to use a floppy drive, you will need to change / alter / adapt the chassis ribbon cable. It is possible to split off 20 conductors and crimp on the 2/10 specific floppy connector.
- If you wish to install a Widget, you will need to install an 8 pin Widget power connector.